Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 8, 2026

Ryasna

Ryasna was part of a Russian woman's headgear, hanging from a kokoshnik or as a temporal pendant.

Last revised
Jul 8, 2026
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Source
Kolts hanging on ryasnas found in Nizovka, Chernihiv Oblast. 12th century source ↗

Ryasna (Russian: рясна) was part of a Russian woman's headgear, hanging from a kokoshnik or as a temporal pendant.1

It was a sign of family's prosperity common in the 11th–13th centuries in Kievan Rus', made in the shape of a chain linking golden, silver or copper pieces, medallions, used as a suspension for a kolt or a similar pendant.

Ryasna pearls attached to a kokoshnik source ↗

Design

Ryasnas were designed to hang down from each side of the headdress, reaching the woman's shoulders with the kolt reaching her chest. The design was in the form of a rain chain and the imagery portrayed always had the same theme: sky and fertile agriculture.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Merriman, Philippa (2009). Silver. UK: The British Museum. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-674-03094-7.
External links